Peter Milton born 1930 | Tate https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/peter-milton-1639
Artist page for Peter Milton (born 1930)
compress long periods of time into a single moment, as in „Family Reunion“ and „The Train
Artist page for Peter Milton (born 1930)
compress long periods of time into a single moment, as in „Family Reunion“ and „The Train
Tate glossary definition for dye destruction print (Cibachrome print, Ilfochrome print): A print made using a photographic printing process in which colour dyes embedded in the paper are selectively bleached away (destroyed) to form a full-colour image
image Twitter Facebook Email Pinterest Nan Goldin Self-Portrait on the train
Artist page for Marie-Louise Von Motesiczky (1906–1996)
Portrait of a Russian Student Marie-Louise Von Motesiczky 1927 People on a Train
Artist page for Lawrence Daws (born 1927)
Read full Wikipedia entry Artworks Burning Train Lawrence Daws 1972 View
Hügelhof, Pirchanger 437, Schwaz 27 July Dear Annerl! It’s infinitely lovely and homely here! Everything’s almost exactly as it was, and the rooms still smell so fresh, it’s almost as though you were staying here and that I need only wait for a ‘Yoo-hoo!’ as you come home from a walk in the woods. I can hear all the familiar noises outside: the scythes, the chickens, the farmers’ children. It’s strange not hearing your children running around in the garden! Their shouts . . . . . . how fantastic to think of them all grown up and back at …
I may even have left it on the train from Lamballe.
Filmed interview with photographer Nan Goldin
and Robert on the bed, NYC Nan Goldin 1982 Artwork Self-Portrait on the train
Artist page for Nan Goldin (born 1953)
Nan one month after being battered Nan Goldin 1984 Self-Portrait on the train
Artist page for Anthony Earnshaw (1924–2001)
friend Eric Thacker, devised surreal activities such as boarding and alighting from trains
Tate glossary definition for agit-prop: An enterprise set up by the Central Committee of the Soviet Communist Party in 1920 intended to control and promote the ideological conditioning of the masses
conditioning of the masses, it took many forms such as palaces of culture, agit-prop trains
her portraits of women have been illustrated recently.3 Few of these include the train